On Fairness, Justice, and VAR: Russia 2018 and France 2019 World Cups in a Historical Perspective

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This book analyzes the 2018 and 2019 men's and women's World Cups to understand how the use of Video Assistant Referees (VAR) affected each tournament. Unlike goal technology, where the decision is entirely left to the machine's algorithm, the VAR still has a human component, making it prone to errors and controversies. Building on the theories of justice, the book quantitatively reviews event-level data while using a historical perspective to depict a novel approach to the effects of VAR in major soccer tournaments. The six chapters examine the use of VAR, discuss when it was not used (but maybe should have been used), and explore how the World Cup evolved with the new technology. Combining the VAR events of 2018 and 2019 with comparable situations from past World Cups guides the reader into debating the meaning of justice and the potential of ever achieving fairness in soccer.

Author(s): Jorge Tovar
Series: Palgrave Pivots in Sports Economics
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Year: 2021

Language: English
Pages: 99
City: Cham

Contents
List of Figures
1 Introduction
References
2 Justice and Fairness
References
3 The Debate of VAR
The History Behind the VAR
VAR Literature
References
4 VAR in Russia 2018 and France 2019
VAR Interventions in the World Cup
VAR and Stoppage Time
Referees and VAR
When VAR is Ignored
References
5 Why and How to Improve VAR
References
6 Conclusion
Annex
References
Index